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28DL Full Member

Construction at this 7,000 hectare site began in 1951 (one of the few complexes purpose-built by the Russians) before the garrison became home to around 18,000 soldiers and civilians, tanks, anti-aircraft missiles, tactical missiles and nuclear missiles.
Soldiers carried out manoeuvres at night to avoid American surveillance, and locals had no idea what kind of shenanigans were going on behind those guarded walls.

R5-M (SS-3 Shyster) missiles were brought here by the elite 72nd RVGK Engineer Brigade in January 1959, and allegedly aimed at London, Paris, Brussels, the Ruhrgebiet and Bonn (where an atomic bomb would actually be an improvement). These things were HUGE, weighing 29.1 tonnes and reaching 20.74 meters, and much more powerful than those dropped on Nagasaki or Hiroshima. The East Germans were not informed, and the missiles were delivered under cover of darkness using back roads so they wouldnâ€™t find out.
The Russians withdrew the weapons in September, as part of a disarmament pact Nikita Khrushchev agreed with the Americans in return for the removal of US missiles in Turkey. However, another sneaky deployment â€“ this time with R-12 (SS-4 Sandal) nuclear missiles â€“ was sent here in 1961 during the top secret Operation Tuman. It was so secret even the soldiers did not know where they were being deployed.
â€œOfficers and career servicemen for a long time had no clue that the road ahead of them crosses the western border of the USSR and transited to the GDR,â€ reported the commander in charge, Colonel Vladimir Aleksandrov from Smolensk.

Col. Aleksandrovâ€™s forces waited for the order to fire. â€œEveryone agonized from the suspense. But the command to load up never came,â€ he said. â€œOn several occasions I reported to division command ... but each time I got the same answer: â€˜Wait. Increase the regimentâ€™s training and combat readiness.â€™â€ In the end, the Soviet Unionâ€™s production of the R-14 Chusovaya missile (SS-5 Skean) with its much greater range eliminated the need for armed nuclear missiles in Germany, and Col. Aleksandrov was given the order to disband on July 12th, 1962.
Of course, there was still enough going on through the Cold War and beyond to keep Vogelsang busy. The Russians didnâ€™t leave until 1993.
Now the Germans want to wipe it from the face of the earth. Itâ€™s not so secret that they can leave it alone. Mechanical rubble makers are slowly making their way from the north, gobbling and grinding their way through history, while the forest does its best to reclaim the 4,000 hectares of woodland cut down before construction began.